News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: PUB LTE: Killed By Prohibition |
Title: | CN ON: PUB LTE: Killed By Prohibition |
Published On: | 2001-06-06 |
Source: | Guelph Mercury (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 17:31:55 |
KILLED BY PROHIBITION
Dear Editor:
Re "Drug use exacts a terrible price", Letters, May 30.
My heart goes out to Judy Wellhauser as she mourns the recent loss of her
brother to drugs, but as a grieving parent of another drugs victim (my son
died in 1993) I have to tell her that her response, while understandable,
is wrong. I felt as she did when my wife and had to travel to Burnaby to
identify Peter's body, but those angry feelings were replaced by other
angry feelings as I read all I could about drugs and drug policy.
Imprisoning every single drug dealer in town will do nothing to save the
lives of other youngsters who will be tempted to try illegal drugs in the
future, others will take their place. The only way to reduce the harm of
drugs is to legalize them.
Allowing users once more to purchase clean, cheap, quality-tested drugs at
the corner store will do more to reduce the harm done by drugs, the user
deaths, the explosion in crime, the jammed jails and courts, the spread of
dangerous diseases like AIDS and hepatitis and increased police corruption,
than hiring a million police officers or building a thousand detox centres.
Ms. Wellhauser's brother, my son and thousands of other brothers and sons
and sisters and daughters who have died as a result of ingesting illegal
drugs were killed by government policy -- drug prohibition. And our senile
joke of a prime minister says he sees no reason to change it.
Alan Randell
Victoria, BC
Dear Editor:
Re "Drug use exacts a terrible price", Letters, May 30.
My heart goes out to Judy Wellhauser as she mourns the recent loss of her
brother to drugs, but as a grieving parent of another drugs victim (my son
died in 1993) I have to tell her that her response, while understandable,
is wrong. I felt as she did when my wife and had to travel to Burnaby to
identify Peter's body, but those angry feelings were replaced by other
angry feelings as I read all I could about drugs and drug policy.
Imprisoning every single drug dealer in town will do nothing to save the
lives of other youngsters who will be tempted to try illegal drugs in the
future, others will take their place. The only way to reduce the harm of
drugs is to legalize them.
Allowing users once more to purchase clean, cheap, quality-tested drugs at
the corner store will do more to reduce the harm done by drugs, the user
deaths, the explosion in crime, the jammed jails and courts, the spread of
dangerous diseases like AIDS and hepatitis and increased police corruption,
than hiring a million police officers or building a thousand detox centres.
Ms. Wellhauser's brother, my son and thousands of other brothers and sons
and sisters and daughters who have died as a result of ingesting illegal
drugs were killed by government policy -- drug prohibition. And our senile
joke of a prime minister says he sees no reason to change it.
Alan Randell
Victoria, BC
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